Preemies likelier to struggle with complex cognitive tasks

Washington: Babies who are born preterm are at an increased risk for neuro-cognitive deficits, a new study has warned.

Psychologists from the Ruhr-Universitat Bochum and the University of Warwick, UK have investigated the relation between the duration of pregnancy and cognitive abilities under varying work load conditions.

"Cognitive performance deficits of children dramatically increase as cognitive workload of tasks increases and pregnancy duration decreases," says Dr Jalia Jekel from the Ruhr-Universitat.

The research team tested 1326 children, born between weeks 23 and 41 of pregnancy, at an age of eight years. Data were collected as part of the prospective Bavarian Longitudinal Study.

The children took part in a range of cognitive tests with varying workload. High workload tasks require the simultaneous integration of different sources of information, thereby placing high demands on the so-called working memory.

The results: The higher the workload and the shorter the pregnancy duration, the larger were the cognitive performance deficits.

Deficits were disproportionally higher for children born before the 34th week of pregnancy compared with children born after week 33. Being born preterm specifically affected the ability to solve high workload tasks, whereas lower workload tasks were largely unaffected.

According to the researchers, these results should be taken into account for routine cognitive follow-ups of preterm children as well as for planning school lessons.

The study has been published in the journal Plos One.

ANI

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